Skype-Blocking Whack-a-Mole Continues
from the that-pesky-competition dept
Blocking disguised data from disruptive applications is a little like trying to hold back a river with a pine cone, and trying to block Skype is certainly the new black. Whether you're a repressive government looking to protect the interests of your state-run phone company, a University or company worried about security holes or bandwidth use, or you're a government annoyed that you're not getting the appropriate kickbacks, there's a growing number of hardware vendors now building gear specifically aimed at blocking Skype for you. The people that build these solutions had already stated that Skype was hard to detect and block, and apparently these companies are having even more trouble detecting the latest version released just a few weeks ago. The continuing game of cat and mouse is familiar to those watching ISPs trying to contain BitTorrent traffic. The easiest way for corporations or colleges to control Skype is to ban the executable from running on the desktop. For countries however this will be a neverending game of whack-a-mole. VoIP is simply data, and data can always be disguised - something Skype engineers seem to be getting better at with each incarnation.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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The odd thing is
I want to give skype a high priority on my network (it being real time data and all), but it's so hard to pin down the traffic I can't isolate it.
If anyone has any ideas, please post a link.
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Banning the Executable?
I suppose if each college created an application that had to be running for any student to gain network access, an application that would stop any offending applications or services from running on student computers - that might do the trick. But what about the old trick of renaming an executable to bypass run restrictions?
I haven't tried doing that in a long time, I wonder if many of today's applications would still run if you rename the exe file that starts it?
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Re: Banning the Executable?
Applications could also be blocked by md5 hash, nullifying the renaming trick. This would still be playing whack-a-mole, since program updates will change the hash.
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Banning the Executable
Just have the program shut down any process with the name "skype" or whatever every couple seconds.
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RE: Banning the Executable
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MMMMMMMM
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Skype Rules
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Re: The odd thing is
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Ok, I'll explain it a little further: make your router inserting small random delays between packets. They'll be unnoticeable for web surfers, but experience of those who use traffic-consuming applications from Skype to YouTube will be less than pleasant.
Most (if not all) those ad-hoc programs that hunt down specific applications are rather easy to fool / stop.
If it's traffic that hurts, you'll need to target it, not the applications that can be run all the different ways, some of which can be just out of your control.
Or, if you're so concerned, make it impossible to run *any* new apps, including those come as ActiveX controls, browser plugins, etc, etc. And disable all the USB ports. And the Remote Desktop. And ... oh, my ;)
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the problem with skype is that it takes over pcs
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Hopeless
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companies already block skype with opensource soft
check this link http://www.lynanda.com/products/software-for-corporations/traffic-filtering
I've heard that this solution is what companies use to forbid skype within their network. China is suspected to use this or a derivative
I think that providing that kind of censorship technology is in total contradiction with the opensource philosophy. Some people suspect Skype to be at the origin of this blocking initiative, for political reasons.
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... and with payware too
#1 on the list is reportedly the one that China Telecom has used.
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